Entering Libya from Tunisia, the
roughly 115 mile drive to Tripoli currently provides a fascinating if
unsettling introduction to the current situation in Tripoli. By the time
I arrived at the hotel my mouth tasted as if I had sipped kerosene and my
clothes reeked of the same. The reason is that the acute petroleum
products shortage has meant that Tunisians and others are transporting for
quick cash, whatever they can get to Tripoli to supply thousands of cars that
are stranded along the roadside without fuel in their tanks.

Just about every opened car trunk I
observed being inspected randomly at more than 50 check points between Jerba,
Tunisia and Tripoli, Libya, were jammed with full plastic fuel containers. Many
apparently leak and over the past three months have left a heavy pall and
stench for nearly one hundred miles. Some trucks, loaded with perhaps
close to 1000 55 gallon drums of gasoline seemed quite ready to topple over
from being seriously top-heavy with the center of gravity being at tire level.
Bread, children toys as well as dry and canned goods also fill many cars.

The western press tend to stay
in their hotel and seem fairly biased in favor of the rebels. For sure what the
BBC is saying about what happens on the streets at night is nonsense. I
needed to use the internet at their hotel and returned to mine at 3 am and
the streets were quiet with a modest police presence at key intersections.
Currently it is very peaceful here with most shops open, and people going about
their lives.

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Since the beginning of NATO
operations a total of 12,887 sorties, including 4,850 strike sorties have
been conducted. On Monday June 27, 2011 there were 142 sorties and 46 strike
sorties. A total of 17 NATO ships are patrolling the central Mediterranean sea
off Libya. To date 1,546 ships have been intercepted and 127 boardings made.

Weapons used on Libya include tow
missiles, mk 82, 83 and mk 84 bombs, i.e. 500, 1000, and 2000 pd
and an assortment of missiles.

A Libyan government report will
detail NATO terrorism and crimes against the civilian population that have
included what it says have been thus far been the bombing of
294 civilian targets, killing and wounding a total of 6,232,
according to the Libyan Red Crescent Society statistics. These civilian targets
include the Libyan Down's Syndrome Society, a school that provided speech
therapy, handicrafts and sports sessions for disabled children as well as
Tripoli's Nassar University, homes, schools, medical facilities and food
storage warehouses, Bombing these sites are all outlawed by the Geneva
Conventions and constitute NATO war crimes. An additional large documentation
project by international organizations is expected to be completed by July 30,
2011.

Those who have pulled together the
initial but detailed stats include the the Libyan Red Crescent and "The Fact
Finding Committee on the Current Events in Libya When the July study is
published it will surprise many.

NATO is running out of targets. It
is now rocketing local village police personnel who are stationed along
certain intersections and roundabouts. When you approach a checkpoint
it's blacked out and the officers come out with a small light to check you
out.

The main attitude one encounters on
the streets of the old city such as Avenue Omar Muktar, is defiance and
strong nationalist support for Libya's Revolution.

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"It's our country. What choice
do we have but to defend it?" is a commonly expressed sentiment. One woman
asked me, "Shall I take off my white Hijab and wave it to surrender when the
NATO troops come to my neighborhood or shall I wear my green scarf and fire my
weapons. For sure my choice is the second!"

A Libyan businessman, who admits he
has lots of free time these days, and who was educated at George Washington
University, commented: "UN Security Council Resolution 1973 authorized the
enforcement of a no-fly zone over Libya to supposedly protect civilians from
Muammar Gaddafi. The reality is that we need NATO to just to declare "mission
accomplished' and then stop slaughtering our "protected" people?"

The June 27 International Criminal
Courts (ICC) arrest warrants issued for Muammar Gadhafi, his son Seif al-Islam
Gadhafi, and Libya intelligence chief Abdullah al-Sanoussi, however pleasing to
the "rebels" and NATO, probably won't have much effect on negotiating a
settlement between the two camps and certainly the warrants will not facilitate
a voluntary regime change. Quite likely, the warrants' effects will tend
toward the reverse, with the Libyan government ignoring, but ridiculing the
much criticized ICC and pointing out its historical pattern of targeting
African leaders. At Tripoli's Rixos Nasser Hotel, just a few hours after the
arrest warrants were announced, Libya's Justice Minister and a high ranking
Foreign Affairs official did just that and then refused to take any questions
from the large gathering of western journalists of whom Libya is distrustful,
given the spate of recent false press reports that have been exposed as hoaxes.

Since 2013, Professor Franklin P. Lamb has traveled extensively throughout Syria. His primary focus has been to document, photograph, research and hopefully help preserve the vast and irreplaceable archaeological sites and artifacts in (more...)

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